![]() ![]() The primary reason psych should be a thing again is because I imagine the Vine community would go to town with it, create hundreds of funny Vines, and we would all laugh and be happier as a culture. For ultimate return on investment, try “noid to the max.” 7. Okay so we still say “duh” in 2014–but not enough! Doy is just more fun to say than duh, and the mispronunciation adds to the effect of shooting down whatever unintelligent person you are speaking to. I like this one because we now live in a world where most people have Ativan prescriptions so taking a chill pill is a literal option. If in the early 2000’s Paris Hilton would have said “that’s not hot” you can bet that a valley girl would have said “barf me out.” 4. This means that something is disgusting or stupid or uncool. “Barf me out”Īnother phrase that illicit colorful imagery in our minds. Who wants someone you’re annoyed with to simply stop talking when you can imaging them forcibly suffocating on a bag? 3. This is the 80’s version of “shut up” but it’s much more fun. You just know that it’s describing a dirty, disgusting thing. What a wonderfully concise way of bringing the mysterious ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’ out of the realms of nonsense rhyme, and into something really quite everyday and plausible.Is there a word that is more fun to say than grody? I feel it’s onomotopea. The boy saw the cat having a mishap and panicking after getting stuck to a fiddle, the cow jumping over the reflection of the moon in water, the dog simply running around and barking with excitement, and the dish and spoon being those from his own supper, sliding into a brook. Frank Baum retold ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’ from a little boy’s perspective. When he wrote story versions of the Mother Goose nursery rhymes in 1897, Wizard of Oz author L. Many historians believe the rhyme could be even older, dating back to the 16th century or further. ![]() ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’ is believed to originate from the 1700s, with the lyrics and melody we know today first published by the composer and nursery rhyme collector James William Elliott, in his 1870 collection National Nursery Rhymes and Nursery Songs. What are the origins of the nursery rhyme? Tolkien satirised ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’ and all the theories surrounding its meaning, in his original song ‘The Man in the Moon Stayed Up Too Late’ – first published in Yorkshire Poetry magazine and then again in Lord of the Rings. The “diddle” is fitting for the speculation and cheating that has been recorded as apparent in Tudor politics. There are even Ancient Egyption themes that creep into the theories of ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’.Īnd there’s one more area of speculation worth mentioning: the history-based theories that the rhyme depicts either Lady Katherine Grey, a granddaughter of Henry VIII’s sister Mary, who had dual relationships with the Earl of Hertford and the Earl of Leicester, or Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s first wife. James Halliwell-Phillipps, a 19th-century Shakespeare scholar and collector of English nursery rhymes, also had a theory that it was a corruption of ancient Greek sayings, but this has been all but discredited.Īnother theory believes the rhyme has everything to do with the stars in the night sky – that the figures correspond with constellations, with the moon-jumping cow being Taurus the bull and the laughing dog being Canis minor. Perhaps the dish and spoon running away is us, distracted by the game, missing our chance to eat our grub before the plate is carried away again. And as well as the cat and fiddle, the rhyme mentions “sport”. Famous nursery rhymes can sometimes be traced back to traditional dances or musical games, so it’s a plausible theory that that’s what ‘Hey Diddle Diddle’ is all about. An old game involving a trap-ball called a ‘cat’ used to be played at pubs, with accompanying music from the fiddle – which explains why it became a pub name at all. One credible theory, though, could be linked to those Cat and Fiddle pubs. So the above scholarly conclusion that it’s not really meant to make sense seems sensible to us. Maybe the dog is laughing and light-headed after too many ales? And how a dish can even run, we’re not sure. The Cat and Fiddle is a common name for inns in England, and the cow jumping over the moon could be a metaphor for… well, it’s not too clear. ![]()
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